The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Murray could play on Challenger Tour to boost comeback

Scot upbeat despite rant at team in Sandgren loss I will win matches each week at that level, he says

- By Simon Briggs TENNIS CORRESPOND­ENT

Andy Murray says he is ready to drop down a level to the Challenger circuit after suffering his second successive defeat on the singles court. He was beaten 7-6, 7-5 on Monday night by American Tennys Sandgren, the world No72, in the first round of the ATP 250 event in Winston-salem. In a match delayed until after 10pm by an electrical storm, Murray was highly competitiv­e, and might well have won had he been able to push his first-serve percentage above a moderate 50.

As it was, the first set slipped away when he netted a volley to lose the tie-break 10-8.

And even though he fought back from a double break down to level the second set at 5-5, he lost his own serve for the third time in quick succession as Sandgren wrapped up the match in 2hr 9min.

“I think there was some good stuff in there,” Murray told the BBC after his defeat. “I think my ball striking was better than last week [when he lost to old foe Richard Gasquet in the first round of the Cincinnati Masters].

“I hit quite a few more winners, came to the net quite a lot.

“Obviously I didn’t win, but I do feel I was a bit more in control of what was happening out there.

“Physically I felt OK in the rallies, but I did notice in the second set that my first serve wasn’t as good, and I think maybe my legs were a little bit heavy at the end there.”

Murray’s frustratio­n boiled over after the lengthy first-set tie-break, and he treated the support staff in his player box to a rant.

“No one in the team ever wants to say anything when there’s something wrong, never,” he said. “Everything is perfect all the f---ing time. Kills me. F---ing joke.”

Murray is now booked to return home, but may play in next week’s

‘I think it would be good for my game because I’m not quite seeing the points as I used to’

Challenger event in Majorca, the Rafa Nadal Open.

“I think for my body it would be a good thing because I do feel at that level I will be winning matches each week,” Murray said.

“And I think it would be good for my game as well because I’m not quite seeing the points as I used to.

“And if I can get more matches, I’ll start to work that out a little bit quicker, and see it faster.

“I would probably rather stay playing outdoors because the next couple of tour events I’m playing are outdoors in Asia, but I haven’t given it tons of thought.”

Murray has already entered the ATP events in Zhuhai and Beijing in late September.

These commitment­s make it unlikely that he will participat­e in the Lawn Tennis Associatio­n’s new Challenger event in Glasgow in the week starting Sept 16, even though the Murray Trophy is named after him and his brother Jamie.

Dan Evans, meanwhile, also spoke to the BBC in Winston-salem, explaining his reasons for the unexpected split with coach David Felgate in Washington last month.

It seems that their relationsh­ip never recovered from the disappoint­ment of Evans’s epic defeat by Joao Sousa of Portugal in the third round of Wimbledon.

Evans said that he now wants to play more aggressive­ly and use the net more.

“I saw a few things different, I think, to the way he saw it,” said

Evans, who stands at a creditable No35 in the ATP’S Race to London (a table based on rankings points won in 2019 only).

“It was amicable, no hard feelings. I sat down and said it was going to come to an end, and that was that. I wanted to go a different way and try something new.

“I’ve never had to do that before. It was not an easy conversati­on, but it was better for me to say it there and then than carry on until the end of this trip, and waste this trip.

“I sort of felt that way as soon as I came back and we started again after Wimbledon. Maybe I lost my spark with him, but it just didn’t feel right, and I thought it needed to change. I thought, over the grass, I was pretty defensive and not really putting my game out there.

“I felt it was time for a new start – to make that change, and to play that way.”

Evans is working with Joshua Milton, a British coach based in San Diego, in Winston-salem this week. He will team up with Davis Cup captain Leon Smith in New York while he decides on his next coach.

 ??  ?? Slow progress: Andy Murray has taken positives from two defeats since returning to singles action
Slow progress: Andy Murray has taken positives from two defeats since returning to singles action
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom